Why the WNBA’s new TV deal is the biggest bargain in sports broadcasting

The WNBA begins its 30th season Friday night with new media rights agreements that, according to a source with knowledge of the agreements, total $3.1 billion over 10 years — or $281 million annually.
For the rights holders, the WNBA is one of the best — if not the best — bargains in sports broadcasting.
Advertisement
Two years ago, the league secured an 11-year, $2.2 billion deal with Disney/ABC/ESPN and Comcast/NBC/Peacock. It has since signed separate pacts with Paramount/CBS, Scripps/Ion and Versant/USA that, according to a release, will distribute 216 regular season games nationally this season.
This doesn’t include a separate deal announced this week in Canada for expansion franchise Toronto Tempo with Bell Media, which owns new rightsholder TSN.
While the $2.2 billion contract begins for the 2026 season, it was agreed upon back in July 2024 just as the NBA secured its 11-year, $76 billion deal with the same three national partners. But based on the WNBA’s growth trajectory, $200 million a year for the main rights packages appears like a relative steal thrown in with the larger NBA package.
Why? Because the WNBA’s viewership numbers are hardly an afterthought compared to other leagues.
Advertisement
Over 25 regular season broadcasts last season on ABC and ESPN, the W drew an average of 1.2 million viewers. During the 2025-2026 NHL regular season, 54 regular season games on ABC and ESPN drew an average of 760,000 viewers.
In 2021, ESPN and Turner Sports signed a seven-year, $4.5 billion media rights deal — or $628 million per year — with the NHL. Hockey’s overall ratings aren’t too dissimilar to the WNBA’s, though the average of 2.5 million viewers that tuned into last June’s Stanley Cup Final was much higher than the W Finals’ 1.5 million average for Las Vegas’ four-game sweep of Phoenix.
Last season, ESPN averaged about 1.2 million viewers per WNBA game. (Photo by Matthew Huang/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
(Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
This season, 245 WNBA games (including the maximum number of possible playoff games) will be broadcast nationally. Under the current broadcast contracts, that comes out to a charge of about $1.15 million per game. By comparison, the NHL is charging about $2.26 million for 277 regular-season and playoff games.
Advertisement
Should a WNBA game be worth about half an NHL game?
“The players have driven every meaningful metric, and the league is skyrocketing into a different atmosphere right now,” Women’s National Basketball Players Association executive director Terri Carmichael Jackson told Yahoo Sports in an emailed statement. “The value of the media rights should move with it. We see that clearly and expect future deals to reflect that reality, with players part of the process as they should be.”
Jackson has questioned the value of the deal since it was agreed upon nearly two years ago. “We look forward to learning how the NBA arrived at a $200 million valuation,” Jackson told FOS in 2024. “There is no excuse to undervalue the WNBA again.”
The new deals are roughly 6.5 times greater than the average annual value of the previous deal that expired at the end of last season. The league and its media partners have agreed that it could revisit the value of the deals after three years to reflect the league’s growth.
Advertisement
If the latest financial data is any indication, the W has already outgrown the media rights deal before it’s even started.
WNBA team valuations released this week by CNBC saw the average team worth $460 million, with the Golden State Valkyries becoming the first ever women’s sports team worth $1 billion as they enter just their second season in the league. Golden State was admitted to the W less than three years ago for a $50 million expansion fee. The Toronto Tempo are valued at $325 million after paying a $115 million expansion fee in 2024, and the expansion Portland Fire are valued at $380 million after their $125 million fee two years ago.
The W’s three-year adjustment option is similar to a strategy the NWSL took last fall. Two years into a four-year, $240 million media rights deal with CBS, ESPN, Prime Video and Scripps, viewership on ESPN grew 72% year over year. With larger audiences and more game inventory as the soccer league added teams, the media deal expanded to include more games from its four existing partners while tacking on nearly 30 matches per season from a new partner, emerging streamer Victory+.
Advertisement
The NWSL and its partners realized midway through the contract that they had to adjust the size and scope of the deal to reflect accelerated, tangible progress and adapted accordingly. Jackson and the WNBPA stressed that the media deal’s value should grow as the WNBA does. With Toronto and Portland entering the league this weekend and new teams coming to Cleveland, Detroit and Philadelphia by 2030, a mid-deal re-evaluation seems inevitable. Until then, $281 million a year to broadcast the W could be one of sports business’ best bargains.


